2013
DOI: 10.3233/nre-130983
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Effects of functional movement strength training on strength, muscle size, kinematics, and motor function in cerebral palsy: A 3-month follow-up

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Cited by 4 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Previous research has attempted to better understand the role of strength limitations in CP gait pathologies via strength training interventions and computational approaches. Using both general and targeted strength training interventions, studies have reported strength gains in subjects with CP, but it is unclear whether and how strength gains translate to functional improvements . Historically, identification of weak muscles for targeted strengthening has relied on qualitative assessments by physiotherapists or analysis of motion capture data, which are subjective and do not provide muscle‐specific information.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous research has attempted to better understand the role of strength limitations in CP gait pathologies via strength training interventions and computational approaches. Using both general and targeted strength training interventions, studies have reported strength gains in subjects with CP, but it is unclear whether and how strength gains translate to functional improvements . Historically, identification of weak muscles for targeted strengthening has relied on qualitative assessments by physiotherapists or analysis of motion capture data, which are subjective and do not provide muscle‐specific information.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A flow chart of the selection process is shown in Figure S1 (online supporting information). The full articles of these 63 studies were reviewed and 46 studies were subsequently excluded for the following reasons: diagnosis, age, sample size, design, intervention, and outcome measure . Of the remaining 17 studies, two articles reported data on mixed study samples consisting of participants with quadriplegia, diplegia, traumatic brain injury, and spinal cord injury (among others) or participants with quadriplegia, diplegia, hemiplegia, and ataxia .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Z powodu braku polskojęzycznych publikacji poruszających temat treningu siłowego kończyn górnych u pacjentów z MPD, za cel niniejszej pracy przyjęto podsumowanie dotychczasowych badań oraz aktualnej wiedzy na te-publikacja była rozdziałem książki [56], jedna publikacja została opublikowana w 1985 roku [57]. Finalnie, szczegółowej analizie poddano 9 publikacji (Rycina I) [9,15,[58][59][60][61][62][63]65].…”
Section: Wynikiunclassified